Europe Markets Weekly — 2026-04-03
European markets endured a turbulent week, whipsawed between relief rallies on Middle East de-escalation hopes and sharp reversals as President Trump's shifting rhetoric on the Iran conflict kept investors on edge. The STOXX 600 closed out March with its worst monthly performance since mid-2022 — a decline of nearly 8% — before staging a strong multi-day bounce in early April that was ultimately pared on Thursday and Friday. Surging energy-driven inflation, the EU's emergency response to the energy price shock, and fresh uncertainty over the conflict's duration leave the outlook deeply uncertain heading into next week.
Europe Markets Weekly — 2026-04-03
Market Snapshot
- STOXX 600: Closed March down –7.99% on the month (worst monthly loss since mid-2022); bounced sharply early in the week of Apr 1, then fell –0.9% on Thursday as Trump warned the Iran war could last weeks
- DAX: Rose +1.2% to 22,562.88 on March 31, then dropped –1.3% on Thursday amid renewed conflict fears
- FTSE 100: Posted its biggest single-day rise in a year (+1.8%) on April 1 on de-escalation hopes; closed just below the flatline on Thursday
- CAC 40: Fell –0.2% on Thursday as Trump vowed fresh Iran strikes; down –0.9% on Thursday's session
Key Drivers

-
Trump's shifting Iran signals drove wild swings. The STOXX 600 recorded its biggest three-day advance in nearly a year after President Trump told reporters that Washington would be "out of Iran pretty quickly," lifting all major European benchmarks sharply on April 1. However, fresh warnings that the war could "drag for weeks" sent stocks lower again by Thursday.
-
Eurozone inflation surged past ECB target. The Eurostat flash estimate for March 2026 showed euro area annual inflation jumping to 2.5%, up sharply from 1.9% in February, with energy the dominant driver. The spike is largely attributed to the disruption to oil and gas supplies caused by the US–Israel military operation against Iran. ECB policymakers are now openly warning that rate hikes remain on the table even if the energy shock proves short-lived.

-
German CPI added to inflation anxiety. Germany's DAX showed relative resilience on March 31 even as higher-than-expected German CPI data was released alongside tentative de-escalation signals. Investors weighed the two opposing forces — geopolitical relief against the prospect of a more hawkish ECB — with the net result a modest 1.2% gain on the day.
-
European stocks closed March with worst monthly loss since mid-2022. Despite a partial recovery on March 31, the STOXX 600 ended the month down 7.99% — its steepest monthly decline in close to four years — as the Iran war disrupted energy markets and clouded the economic outlook across the continent.
Earnings & Corporate
No major European earnings reports with stock price impact were published after 2026-03-27 in the available research results for this period. The earnings calendar for STOXX 600 companies for the week ahead was tracked but without specific EPS or revenue outcomes reported.
Note: Specific corporate earnings results with confirmed post-March-27 publication dates were not available in this week's data. We will cover confirmed earnings next issue.
Geopolitics & Energy

- EU reviving 2022-era energy crisis measures. The European Union's energy chief announced that the bloc is considering reinstating emergency energy measures first deployed during the 2022 Russia-Ukraine supply shock, as Iran-related disruptions drive energy costs sharply higher. The EU also issued letters urging member states to curb oil and gas demand and boost energy savings, and warned explicitly that prices will not return to pre-war levels even if the Iran conflict ends, citing tight global markets.

- Orbán calls for lifting Russian energy sanctions; Merz warns of pandemic-scale economic damage. In a sharply divisive development, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán called on the EU to lift sanctions on Russian energy as a way to offset the Iran-driven price surge, clashing publicly with Polish Prime Minister Tusk. Meanwhile, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz warned that the economic fallout from the Iran war is on track to rival the damage wrought by the Covid pandemic or Russia's 2022 invasion of Ukraine — describing the situation as "'beyond what we could imagine.'"

What to Watch Next Week
- ECB communications: With eurozone inflation at 2.5% and energy prices structurally elevated, market participants will closely monitor any ECB speeches or minutes for signals on whether the bank will move ahead with rate hikes. The ECB's next scheduled policy meeting and any Lagarde appearances will be key.
- EU energy emergency measures: The European Commission is expected to formalise or detail its package of 2022-style energy crisis interventions for member states, including demand-curbing directives and possible household/business support mechanisms.
- Iran conflict developments & G7 coordination: The G7 foreign ministers' discussions on a coordinated response to the Iran war will be closely watched. Any ceasefire signals — or their absence — from Washington will continue to be the dominant market driver.
- Upcoming corporate earnings: Several STOXX 600 companies are scheduled to report in the coming week; investors will be especially attentive to guidance from energy-intensive sectors such as chemicals, industrials, and aviation for evidence of margin pressure from fuel costs.
- Euro area PMI & economic data: Fresh purchasing managers' index readings for April will offer the first real-time read on how the energy price shock is feeding into manufacturing and services activity across the eurozone.
This content was collected, curated, and summarized entirely by AI — including how and what to gather. It may contain inaccuracies. Crew does not guarantee the accuracy of any information presented here. Always verify facts on your own before acting on them. Crew assumes no legal liability for any consequences arising from reliance on this content.
Create your own signal
Describe what you want to know, and AI will curate it for you automatically.
Create Signal